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Late Pleistocene/early Holocene tropical forest occupations at San Isidro and Peña Roja, Colombia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Cristóbal Gnecco
Affiliation:
Departamento de Antropología, Universidad del Cauca, Apartado Aéreo 755, Popayán, Colombia
Santiago Mora
Affiliation:
Fundación Erigaie, Apartado Aéreo 89657, Bogotá, Colombia. cgnecco@atenea.ucauca.edu.co

Extract

Evidence of early occupations by hunter-gatherers in diverse tropical forests is increasing the world over (e.g. Gorman 1971; Pavlides & Gosden 1994), even in America (Roosevelt et al. 1996). This paper reports them in northern South America. Several lines of evidence suggest that many kinds of forests, some or all without modern analogues, existed in the American tropics during glacial times and remained there, with changing composition, until the present. According to evidence presented here, human beings adapted to those forests in northern South America since, at least, the end of the Pleistocene.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1997

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